"Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown" (Shakespeare)
Ignoring the plight of jobless young people in sub-Saharan Africa is
a recipe for political instability and global insecurity, warned a
high-level symposium of Africa’s interior, environment and foreign
affairs ministers in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.
The high-level symposium, which was held ahead of this year’s World Day
to Combat Desertification (WDCD) marked on June 17, stressed that
Africa’s heavy reliance on the natural resource base for livelihoods is a
challenge, and its mismanagement increases household risks and
amplifies the vulnerability of millions of people.
This was the first time high-ranking officials drawn from Africa’s
foreign affairs, environment and interior ministries met jointly to find
solutions to Africa’s growing challenge of rural youth unemployment
that is driving distress migration and radicalisation of disillusioned
young men.
“Frustrations will boil over with more migration and more conflict over a shrivelling resource base.” Monique Barbut
Participating ministers called for support to create land-based jobs in
the rural areas to ward off the temptation for the most disillusioned to
take up alternative but dangerous sources of income.
They called for the identification of sites where tenure or access to
land rights can be secured and provided to vulnerable at-risk-groups.
The high-ranking officials also called for partnerships to create 2
million secure land-based jobs through rehabilitation of 10 million
hectares of degraded land.
As well, they called for investment in rural infrastructure,
rehabilitation tools and skills development and prioritisation of job
creation in unstable and insecure areas.
The symposium examined the threats connected to sustainability,
stability and security, namely, conflicts linked to access to degrading
natural resources, instability due to unemployment of rural youth and
insecurity and the risk of the radicalization triggered by social and
economic marginalization and exposure to extremist groups.
Africa’s growing challenge of rural youth unemployment that is
driving distress migration and radicalisation of disillusioned young men
Drought, Unemployment and Hopelessness, Fertile Grounds for Extremism
Presidents Roch Marc Christian Kaboré of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Boubacar
Keita of Mali and Mahammadou Issoufou of Niger stressed that drought,
food insecurity, water scarcity, unemployment, hopelessness about the
future and poverty are fertile grounds for extremism, and a sign of
insecurity, instability and unsustainability.
Two days earlier, more than 400 civil society representatives from
African participated in their World Day observance, also in Ouagadougou,
and organised by Spong, a local non-governmental organisation, to
prepare for the International Summit of Non-State Actors titled,
Desertif’actions 2017, to be held on 27 and 28 June 2017 in Strasbourg,
France, which will be dedicated to land degradation and climate change,
bringing together 300 stakeholders from 50 countries.
The outcomes of the Strasbourg Summit will be presented to the 13th
session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations
Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) to be held in Ordos, China,
in September 2017, and the 23rd session of the Conference of Parties to
the Climate Change Convention.
According to Monique Barbut, UNCCD Executive Secretary, more than 375
million young people will enter Africa’s job market over the next 15
years, of whom 200 million be living in the rural areas.
Africa’s growing challenge of rural youth unemployment that is driving
distress migration and radicalisation of disillusioned young men
“Millions of rural young people face an uncertain future due to the lack
of decent rural jobs and continuous loss of livelihoods due to land
degradation and falling yields…Frustrations will boil over with more
migration and more conflict over a shrivelling resource base.”
The challenge is bigger than just a matter of a million young African’s
attempting to make the move towards Europe over the course of a year,
she said, adding that the UK Ministry of Defence estimates up to 60
million Africans are at risk of distressed migration as a result of land
degradation and desertification pressures in the next two decades.
The 1st African Action Summit by Heads of State and Government held
in Marrakesh in 2016 launched the Sustainability, Stability and Security
initiative – the 3S Initiative – with a commitment to speed up the
restoration and rehabilitation of degraded lands as a means to create
jobs for rural youth.
According to Batio Bassiere, Minister of Environment, Green Economy and
Climate Change, Burkina Faso, his country, on average, loses 360,000
hectares of land to degradation every year, with significant impacts on
85 per cent of the population that lives off agriculture and pastoral
activities.
As stated in the theme of the World Day to Combat Desertification, Our
Land, Our Home, Our Future must be preserved against all forms of
degradation or desertification, said the minister.
Burkina Faso is now among the 110 countries that to-date have committed
to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal target of land degradation
neutrality by 2030, he said.
The UN Convention to Combat Desertification
The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) is the
only legally binding international agreement on land issues. It promotes
good land stewardship, and its 196 Parties aim, through partnerships,
to implement the Convention and achieve the Sustainable Development
Goals.
According to UNCCD, the end goal is to protect our land, from over-use
and drought, so it can continue to provide us all with food, water and
energy.
“By sustainably managing land and striving to achieve land degradation
neutrality, now and in the future, we will reduce the impact of climate
change, avoid conflict over natural resources and help communities to
thrive.”
From IPS News
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